Kane v. Mendenhall

56 P.2d 498, 5 Cal. 2d 749, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 460
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1936
DocketL. A. 14589
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 56 P.2d 498 (Kane v. Mendenhall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kane v. Mendenhall, 56 P.2d 498, 5 Cal. 2d 749, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 460 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

Plaintiff Betty Kane brought this action to procure cancellation of a deed executed by her to defendants J. J. Mendenhall and Grace Mendenhall, his wife, as grantees. In view of the fact that the property had been transferred to bona fide purchasers by the Mendenhalls, the court below awarded plaintiff damages in the sum of $2,500 and also exemplary damages in the sum of $2,000. The court *751 also rendered judgment against defendant American Surety Company, surety on the real estate broker’s bond of defendant J. J. Mendenhall, for $2,000.

The defendant surety company contends that as the penal sum of the bond was $2,000, the amount required by statute, the municipal court of Los Angeles County had jurisdiction of any suit against it, and it could not be joined in a suit in the superior court against the broker for damages exceeding $2,000. Since 1928 the Constitution has provided that “the superior court shall have original jurisdiction in all civil eases and proceedings (except as in this' article otherwise provided, and except, also, cases and proceedings in which jurisdiction is or shall be given by law to municipal or to justices or other inferior courts) ...” (Art. VI, sec. 5.) The statute fixing the jurisdiction of the municipal courts provides : “Municipal courts shall have original jurisdiction of civil cases and proceedings as follows: (a) In all eases at law in which the demand, exclusive of interest, or the value of the property in controversy, amounts to two thousand dollars or less, except cases which involve the legality of any tax, impost, assessment, toll or municipal fine.” (See. 89, Code Civ. Proc., adopted in 1933, based on sec. 29 of the 'Municipal Court Act, Deering’s Gen. Laws, Act 5238, p. 2925.)

It would be unfortunate if an interpretation of our code provisions relating to jurisdiction and to joinder required plaintiff herein to prosecute two separate actions. The liability of the principal and the liability of the surety, though differing in amount, since the principal is liable to the plaintiff for the full amount of damages suffered, and the surety only in the penal sum of the bond, rest alike upon acts of fraud committed by the principal to the damage of plaintiff, and require the examination of questions common to both principal and surety. Actions separately tried might result in different judgments. A judgment against the principal is not conclusive in a separate action against the surety. (Mc-Phetridge v. Smith, 101 Cal. App. 122 [281 Pac. 419]; Mahana v. Alexander, 88 Cal. App. Ill [263 Pac. 260]; 1 Freeman on Judgments, p. 1002; 23 Cal. Jur. 1062.) In Paige v. Reinecke, 139 Cal. App. 225 [33 Pac. (2d) 454], and Yeoman v. Sherry, 10 Cal. App. (2d) 567 [52 Pac. (2d) 555], the *752 appellate courts, without discussion, affirmed judgments for $2,000 against the surety and against the broker for more than $2,000.

The appeal of defendant surety company requires consideration of two questions: (1) whether in the absence of any question relating to jurisdiction depending on the amount in controversy, recovery may be had in a joint action, against the principal for the full amount of damages suffered by reason of acts of the principal covered by the bond, and against the surety for the penal sum of the bond; and (2) if recovery ordinarily may be had in a single action, may the principal and surety be sued jointly in the superior court where the penal sum of the statutory bond, which represents the limit of recovery against the surety, is $2,000.

Section 9a of the Real Estate Brokers’ Act (DBering’s Gen. Laws, Act 112, p. 25) provided that any person who sustains an injury covered by the real estate broker’s bond “shall have the right in his own name to commence such an action against said real estate broker and his sureties for the recovery of any damages sustained by the failure or omission of said real estate broker to perform his duties or obligations or any of them”. (Section 9a was repealed in 1933, Stats. 1933, p. 540, the repealing act providing: “Provided, however, that this repeal shall not affect any cause of action arising under any bond given prior to the effective date of this act.”) We are of the view that the above provision of section 9a authorized recovery against the principal and surety in a single action. It is suggested that the sole purpose of-the provision was to make it plain that the injured person had a direct right of action on the bond, which ran to the state of California. We cannot accede to this proposition. In the light of the nature and purpose of the bond and the other terms- of the act in regard thereto, in the absence of such a provision the injured person as the real party in interest could sue thereon. (4 Cal. Jur. 363.)

Nor can it be said that the joint action contemplated by section 9a is solely an action on the bond, in which recovery against the principal, as well as against the surety, is limited to $2,000, the penal sum of the bond. Damages suffered through. the fraud of the broker may often exceed the penal sum of the statutory bond of $2,000. A cause of action in tort *753 against the broker to recover full damages existed independently of the provisions of the Real Estate Brokers’ Act, or the existence of a bond. Section 9 a constitutes a recognition of this right. The section provides for recovery “of. any damages sustained by the failure or omission of said real estate broker to perform his duties or obligations or any of them’’. (Italics ours.) In so far as the damages suffered exceed the penal sum of the bond, the action against the principal may be said to rest on his delictual liability, rather than on a contractual liability based on the bond. As to the surety necessarily recovery is upon his contractual liability on the bond, and is limited thereby to $2,000, the penal sum of the bond.

Decisions in other jurisdictions to the effect that the surety cannot be joined in an action against the principal based on a common laAV delictual liability, are found to rest upon a preservation in those jurisdictions of the common law rule against joinder of actions in tort and contract. In this state, an action in tort may be joined Avith an action on contract Avhere both arise out of the same transaction. (Sec. 427, subd. 8, Code Civ. Proe.) Gldrardelli v. Bourland, 32 Cal. 585, was decided under the Practice Act, Avhich did not provide for joinder of actions in tort and contract when they arose out of the same transaction.

The joinder of the surety in some jurisdictions has also been regarded as violative of the common law rule that causes of action to be united must affect all parties to the action, which rule is embodied in this, state in section 427 of the Code of Civil Procedure. If this provision of section 427 of the Code of Civil Procedure could be construed as prohibiting joinder in a single action of a claim against the principal for full damages, with a claim against the surety limited by the penal sum of the bond, the effect of section 9a of the Real Estate Brokers’ Act is to remove such a joint action from the application of said provision.

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Bluebook (online)
56 P.2d 498, 5 Cal. 2d 749, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kane-v-mendenhall-cal-1936.